Australian miners maiming Malawians, exploiting old law

Abraham Siliwonde does not know what Uranium is used for. But he is certain that radiation made him blind and reduced him to a pauper. He now relies on well-wishers and his wife’s small business to survive.

Siliwonde: Exploited

Siliwonde used to work at Kayelekera Uranium Mine in the northern district of Karonga, about 600km form the Capital City Lilongwe.

“I was guiding dumpers carrying high grade uranium ore. I could feel intense heat from lumps of uranium ore and the next day I would pass yellowish urine and start feeling malarial symptoms,” he told a local daily.

It did not take long before he started experiencing sight problems that sometimes he could fail to recognise some of his long time colleagues. This negatively affected his performance at work.

Because of his condition, the company fired him and gave him MK75, 000 ($150) as a retirement package. Together, with his family of 11, he now lives in a rented derelict house at the district town.

“The vitritis (posterior uveitis) may indeed be due to exposure to radiation. It is well known that all radioactive substances can cause radiation retinopathy which appears like posterior uveitis…”reads the report in part.

In normal cases Siliwonde’s could have been given the deserving package but General Manager for International Affairs Greg Walker at the mining company said the company could not give him full package because he was an employee for one of the companies it contracted.

Another former employee, Francis Mkonda, was fired on his hospital bed when recuperating from severe injuries he sustained while at work at Kayelekera Mine.

Mkonda, who worked as a Processor Operator, collapsed at work on January 13, 2013. The company fired him on January 24, 2013 citing huge hospital bills saying it was constrained financially hence it could not pay.

He died a few days later after receiving the dismissal letter at the hospital.

Siliwonde and Mkonda are just a microcosm of the many employees who were happy to get work at Kayelekera Uranium Mine but left forsaken, disgusted or died paupers.

The Kayelekera Uranium Mining project was commissioned in 2007 after Malawi government awarded a uranium mining license to Paladin Africa Limited (PAL), an Australian and Canadian registered company.

The permit covered 5,550 hectares for a period of 15 years following the completion of a development agreement

Paladin has consistently stated that it is making a big investment in Malawi, and that the country is benefitting from a variety of revenue streams and that it has not yet earned ‘a single Kwacha’ in return on its investment.

In February 2014, PAL suspended operations and put the Mine on what it called ‘care and maintenance’. It also lay off the bulky of its employees, about 300 people.

The company cited the declining price of Uranium on the global market in the aftermath of the Fukushima nuclear disaster in Japan in 2011.

However, in its quarterly activities report dated December 31, 2014 it states that it has started a feasibility study to develop a detailed plan for the recommencement of production at Kayelekera when uranium prices justify.

And at Kanyika Area in Mzimba District, northern Malawi about 250 km from the capital city Lilongwe, communities here have been drinking water contaminated with hazardous metals, courtesy of another Australian mining company Globe Metals and Mining Limited.

Globe Metals and Mining will mine Niobium, a critical additive in the production of sophisticated steels.

The Kanyika Mining project will be the second major mining operation in the country after the Kayelekera Uranium Mine in Karonga district.

“We were born here at our ancestral land. This is our village and we have nowhere else we call home. Then if they are telling us that the water we are using here is bad, has some chemicals, then what do they want us to do? They are supposed to give us clean water like what they promised us when coming” 40 year mother of seven Nyuma Thole told Nyasa Times when asked whether she will continue drinking water which various NGOs and the company itself confirmed had elevated levels of Uranium.

Australian mining companies are accused of involvement in the killing and maiming of miners and residents across Africa through dangerous, unsustainable and illegal mining practices.

The Federal and Queensland governments have recently been, or still are, shareholders in some of these companies.

There are over 300 Australian stock market- listed companies in Africa – more than any other country – and nearly 35 of them have been implicated in allegations of corruption, tax avoidance, environmental destruction and human rights abuses.

The Greens’ former senator Scott Ludlam in question No. 331 asked the Minister for Foreign Affairs, on 6 December 2010whether there was need for Australia to legislate extra territorially its mining companies operating overseas so that they operate in line with Australian human rights and environmental standards rather than those of the host state.

“Australian companies are responsible for ensuring they abide by the laws of the jurisdiction in which they operate as well as Australian laws that apply extraterritorially. The Australian Government expects all Australian companies to comply with all applicable laws and obligations when operating abroad and to conduct their business according to best practice,” said former Senator Stephen Conroy on behalf of the Foreign Affairs.

But in Malawi they seem to work with impunity by blatantly disregarding the law because Malawi still uses a 34 year old mining law which has several deficiencies.

Malawi is blessed with significant quantities of coal, limestone, niobium, rare earths, bauxite, nickel, and precious gems such as rubies, sapphires and diamonds and heavy mineral sandsaccording to a World Bank report, Malawi Mineral Sector Review: Source of Economic Growth and Development and also results from the country’s recent geological mapping exercise.

Malawi enacted its Mines and Minerals Act in 1981 long before the country charted any of its mineral resources.

But the Act has several deficiencies that have provided fertile ground for corruption, profit shifting and tax evasion.

For instance, it vests the power in the President to grant mining licences with no consultation required with other stakeholders, it allows mining companies to operate by bilateral negotiations rather than consistent application of the law which means some companies may get special favours.

And it also lack of provisions to maximise benefits for the country such as requiring certain proportions of supplies to come from Malawi and also ensure that communities benefit from mining revenue. It is also devoid of measures to protect people displaced by mining, and health and safety regulations for specific mineral extractions.

Since 2000, Malawi has issued more than 172 mining licences to boost and diversify its economy which depends largely on tobacco.

Muluzi noted that Malawi had several mining operations saying there is need to learn from such operations and improve things where there is need.

“This is why we have been reviewing the legislation to address the deficiencies that have impeded development of the sector and align it with aspirations of Malawians,” Mr Muluzi was quoted by Mining in Malawi.

In January 2013, the government kick-started the process of overhauling the mining law by approving a new Mines and Mineral Policy.

But scores of villagers at Kanyika and elsewhere where there are mining operations are not convinced with both Muluzi’s explanation and the pace of the review of the mining legislation.

“We feel government has ignored us for long. The mine has created hunger in the area. Some of the people abandoned their gardens in anticipation of relocation and compensation. Why is it taking this long to be compensated?” Village Headman YohaneMphepo told the Nation Newspaper.

Here the villagers feel cheated and have been demanding answers to a litany of issues such as lack of consultations, what government is doing about the environmental impact assessment, issues of safety and the mining company’s commitment on corporate social responsibility.

“We suspect some foul dealings. There is no safety for us. There was no transparency …from the beginning. People do not know the merits and demerits of this mine. We do not have to ask for this information but given to us freely,” another Village headman KawagheNkhoma said.

Muluzi said Malawi will also review the Mines and Occupational Health and Safety Act just like other countries have done.

The author Collins Mtika is Nyasa Times head of investigation desk. The Fund for Investigative journalism (FIJ) funded this story.

Collins Mtika needs a lecture on radiation or electromagnetic spectrum. He doesn’t even know that those working in the x-ray department are exposed to radiation. He does not even know that pilots and those that use aeroplanes frequently are exposed to radiation more than uranium miners. He does not know how radiation is emitted at all. You first need to know the decay series of radioactive substances and what the half lives mean. You have to know that uranium or atomic weapons become dangerous after the nucleus is split by the introduction of neutrons into a particular isotope of the… Read more »

Three types of radiation are involved and these are alpha, beta and gamma radiation. They are called ionizing radiation because of their ability to strip off electrons in media through which they travel. The strength of radiation determines the effects that are suffered by those that are expose. The alpha particles are too weak to penetrate the skin and clothing and the skin are enough to protect humans. However, they could be a threat internally. Gamma rays are similar to xrays and can penetrate. Beta radiation are charged electron and can affect the eyes. Uranium us a very weak radioactive… Read more »

Three types of radiation are involved and these are alpha, beta and gamma radiation. They are called ionizing radiation because of their ability to strip off electrons in media through which they travel. The strength of radiation determines the effects that are suffered by those that are expose. The alpha particles are too weak to penetrate the skin and clothing and the skin are enough to protect humans. However, they could be a threat internally. Gamma rays are similar to xrays and can penetrate. Beta radiation are charged electron and can affect the eyes. Uranium us a very weak radioactive… Read more »

Enough is enough.Moreover we are not gaining anything from this Kayerekera mine.We are giving 90 days ultimatum to the government of Malawi & Paladin company to close this nonnsence mine for ever and never come back to resume any mining activities here or else we will take the law in our own hands.This is a message to Paladin mining company executive, the Australian and Malawian governmnents do not say later that we did not warn you.This is our land and we deserve better treatment as human beings.We repeat we are giving 90 days for those Paladin executives to close the… Read more »

there is a vast amount of precious stones buried beneath the earth’ surface of mother malawi.sadly though the people of this land will never live to enjoy the benefits of these valuable resources.government officials,especially every incoming president and their ministers have systimatically made sure that the mining policy is left beset with loopeholes all the time.in doing this they that all the returns from our resources are left to them for plunder.the kayerekela issue aside just wait and see at what will happen with the kanyika project.activities in the mining industry raise more questions than answers.how can one explain the… Read more »